Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Apa Style Guide PDF
Apa Style Guide PDF
Website
(American Psychological American Psychological Association. (2010). Ethical principles of psychologists and code of
Association, 2010) conduct. Retrieved from http://apa.org/ethics/code/index.aspx
WRITING CENTRE
Level 3 East, Hub Central, North Terrace campus, The University of Adelaide SA 5005 Australia
T: +61 8 8313 5771 | E: writingcentre@adelaide.edu.au | W: www.adelaide.edu.au/writingcentre/
APA Referencing Guide
Magazine article
(Kluger, Sharples, & Kluger, J., Sharples, T., & Silver, A. (2007). What makes us moral. Time, 170(23), 54-60.
Silver, 2007)
Books
Book with one author (with city and country for publisher & page number for specific idea or quotation in in-text citation)
(O’Shea, 2009, p. 6) O’Shea, P. (2009). So you think you can learn: An evidence based guide to improving
learning. Brisbane, Australia: Cadamon.
Book with more than one author (with city and state for publisher)
(Haslam, Reicher, & Haslam, S. A., Reicher, S., & Platow, M. (2010). The new psychology of leadership: Identity,
Platow, 2010) influence, and power. New York, NY: Psychology Press.
Book chapter
(Juslin, 2008) Juslin, P. N. (2008). Emotional responses to music. In S. Hallam, I. Cross, & M. Thaut
(Eds.), The Oxford handbook of music psychology (pp. 377-389). New York, NY:
Oxford University Press.
Book written in a foreign language (give a translation of the book title only)
(Molinari & Labella, 2007) Molinari, E., & Labella, A. (2007). Psicologia clinica: Dialoghi e confronti [Clinical
psychology: Dialogue and confrontation]. Milan: Springer.
Translated book
(Debray, 2007) Debray, R. (2007). Praised be our lords: A political education (J. Howe, Trans.). London,
England: Verso.
Conference paper
(Falkner, McEntee, Falkner, K., McEntee, J., Palmer, E., & Botten, J. (2008). Establishing an education
Palmer, & Botten, 2008) community of practice. 31st Conference of Higher Education Research &
Development Society of Australasia: Engaging Communities. Retrieved from
http://www.herdsa.org.au/wp-content/uploads/conference/2008/media/Falkner.pdf
Thesis
(Leahy, 2009) Leahy, C. (2009). Peer responses to psychologically distressed tertiary students: The
detection of distress and the helping behaviours of student colleagues from
medicine, compared to psychology, law and mechanical engineering students
(Doctoral thesis, University of Adelaide, Australia). Retrieved from
http://digital.library.adelaide.edu.au/dspace/handle/2440/56314
CD-ROM/DVD/Film/Maps/Pamphlet/Video
("Understanding Drug Understanding Drug Use [Computer software]. (1998). Perth, Australia: WA Alcohol and
Use," 1998) Drug Authority in conjunction with Southern Public Health Unit.
Patent
(Keller & Dolan, 2004) Keller, E. B., & Dolan, M. J. (2004). U.S. Patent No. 7,653,568. Washington, DC: U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office.
Notes
Order of references
• Put references on the reference list in alphabetical order.
• Put references by exactly the same author/s in chronological order (earliest first) on the reference list.
• For an in-text reference to two sources with similar or related ideas, put the work that is first on the reference list
first, followed by a semicolon (;) and then the work that is second on the reference list (alphabetically)
e.g. (Amsel et al., 2009; Habel 2009).
Authors/Editors
• For works with no identified author, the in-text reference uses the first few words from the title and then the year. If
the words used are an article or book chapter title, use double quote marks. (See Newspaper article with no
author). Use ‘Anonymous’ only if this is used on the work itself.
• For seven or less authors, write all names in full on the reference list.
• For eight or more authors use the first six authors' surnames and initials on the reference list, then use '...', and
then give the final author’s surname and initials.
• For three to five authors use all authors’ surnames in the first in-text references, and then use only the first
author’s surname and 'et al.'
• For six or more authors always use the first author’s surname and 'et al.' in in-text citations. (See Journal article
with six or more authors).
• For in-text references, use 'and' between surnames in the main text and '&' in brackets.
• Use the abbreviation (Ed.) or (Eds.) in brackets following the name/s to distinguish editor/s (from author/s). For
books with both authors and editors, put the author surname/s first at the start of the reference, then for the editors
put the initial/s first and then the surname/s.
• Works by exactly the same author/s published in the same year are included in the reference list in alphabetical
order by title with a, b, c added to the year in both in-text references and reference list entries.
Year
• For works with no publication date recorded, use 'n.d.'
• For most websites, the year the site was last updated is sufficient and a retrieval date is unnecessary. Give a
retrieval date for websites which may change frequently, such as Wikis (after carefully considering the
appropriateness of these sources; see Website which changes frequently & Facebook page).
• The year can be omitted in the second in-text reference within one paragraph.
Titles
• Use italics for journal, book and other whole-source titles. Use regular font style for titles of sections of sources
(e.g. journal articles, book chapters, posts to message boards).
• Use capitals for all words (except 'of' etc) in a journal or series title. Use a capital letter for only the first word of a
book, article, report, chapter or volume title (and any proper nouns). (See examples of journal article and book
chapter).
Publication details
• For unusual source types, include a description immediately after the title. Common descriptions include:
[Demographic map], [CD], [DVD], [Brochure], [Electronic mailing list message], [Web log message], and for public
Facebook pages, [Fan page] or [Group page]. (See Facebook page).
• Include the city and an abbreviation for the state for books or reports published in the US, and the city and country
for books or reports published elsewhere.
• If the publisher is the same as the author, use 'Author' instead of repeating the name.
• If a DOI (digital object identifier) is available, leave out all publication details and use the abbreviation "doi:"
followed by the DOI. (This number can be entered at the website crossref.org/ to access the electronic version of
the source.)
• For journals, only include an issue number (in addition to a volume number) if the pages are numbered from 1 for
each issue.
Page/Chapter/Paragraph/Verse/Line numbers
• When quoting or referring to specific ideas, include page numbers where possible.
• Paragraph numbers can be used for electronic sources.
• When available, part / chapter / line / verse numbers can be used instead of page numbers.
Online versions
• Most sources follow the same referencing format for both paper and electronic versions, except they end with a
digital object identifier (DOI) or URL (home page URL of journal/publisher, not article URL and not database
information), and may not include page numbers. (See Journal article viewed online, Newspaper or magazine
article viewed online, Electronic version of a print book).
Sources that do not go on the Reference List – use in-text citations only
• Secondary sources – when someone writes about what someone else said or thought.
In the in-text references, include the name/s of the original author/s followed by the words 'as cited in' and the
surname/s and year for the work you actually read e.g. (O’Regan as cited in Habel, 2009, p. A-94). Only put the
secondary source (book/article) you actually read on your reference list.
• Personal communication
• Classics/the Koran/the Bible
• Private Facebook pages with content only visible to friends – reference as Personal communication.
• Lecture handouts (not available online) or your lecture notes – find similar ideas in published sources whenever
possible. When not possible, reference as Personal communication.
8 February 2012